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Encyclopedia > Trunk (luggage)
A large trunk with leather handles
A large trunk with leather handles

A trunk, also known as a travelling chest, is a large cuboid container for holding clothes and other personal belongings, typically about 1.5 metres wide, and 0.5 metres each deep and high, or about 25" to 40" wide, 14" to 28" high, and 14" to 24" deep. They were most commonly used for extended periods away from home, such as for boarding school, or long trips abroad. Most trunks are now used as furniture and decorative accessories such as coffee tables, linen and blanket storage, and storage of items such as pictures, files, and personal memorabilia. Image File history File linksMetadata Download high resolution version (2816x2112, 3708 KB) Summary A tatty trunk I found in my flatshare. ... Image File history File linksMetadata Download high resolution version (2816x2112, 3708 KB) Summary A tatty trunk I found in my flatshare. ... Modern leather-working tools Leather is a material created through the tanning of hides, pelts and skins of animals, primarily cows. ... Men and women wearing suits, an example of one of the many modern forms of clothing (from the 1937 Chicago Woolen Mills catalog) Clothing is defined, in its broadest sense, as coverings for the torso and limbs as well as coverings for the hands (gloves), feet (socks, shoes, sandals, boots... The metre, or meter, is a measure of length, approximately equal to 3. ... A boarding school is a school where some or all students not only study but also live, amongst their peers but away from their home and family. ...


There are many styles of trunks. Some of the most popular are Jenny Lind, Saratoga, Steamer, Wardrobe, Dometop, and Wall Trunks. Most trunks were made of pine and covered with some type of material such as leather, paper, canvas, or embossed metal.


A few trunks were covered with matched oak slats. Oak slat trunks, made by Excelsior Trunk Company and Clinton Trunk Company, are amongst the rarest of trunks today with prices ranging into the thousands of dollars.

An oak-slat trunk
An oak-slat trunk

Jenny Lind Trunks have a distinctive hour glass or keyhole shape when looking at them from the end. They were named after the Swedish singer of the same name who toured America in the mid 19th Century along with PT Barnum. She carried a trunk of that style with her and they became quite popular. They were made for a short period of time from about 1855-1865. Image File history File links 1488th. ... Image File history File links 1488th. ... Jenny Lind in La Sonnambula. ...


Saratoga trunks were the premium trunks of many makers. They had compartments and trays and heavy duty hardware.


Steamer trunks are usually canvas-covered and have flat or slightly curved tops. They were made around 1890-1910 and are some of the most common type of trunk.


Wardrobe trunks stand on end and have drawers on one side and hangers for clothes on the other. They are very large and heavy and were used for extended travel by ship or train.


A dometop trunk has a high, curved top that rises up to heights of 25-30". The earliest dometop trunks were made much the same way as barrels were made, with tapered staved for the top. Later dometops were made with press-molded plywood.


Wall trunks are made with special hinges so that when opened the trunk could still be put flat up against a wall.


Some of the better known makers were Louis Vuitton, Goyard, Haskell Brothers, MM Secor, Clinton, Hartmann, Oshkosh, Molloy, Truesdale, and Taylor. Louis Vuitton is still the most popular trunk company in the world, but in France there are numerous manufacturers of trunks including Ephtee and La Malle Bernard. Louis vuitton was a great man he was born on fh 12 3845. ...


Trivia

An extremely elaborate set of steamer trunks is purchased and used by Tom Hanks' titular hero in the 1990 film Joe Versus The Volcano. Thomas Jeffrey Hanks (born July 9, 1956) is a two-time Academy Award-winning American actor who starred in family-friendly comedies before achieving notable success as a dramatic actor. ... This article is about the year. ... Joe Versus the Volcano (JVTV), though praised by notable reviewers such as Roger Ebert at the time of its release in 1990, was generally considered a box office flop, and one of Tom Hanks minor films. ...


External links

  • A french-language history of trunks
  • Website for "The Trunk Shop"

Trunks originated as just that, trunks of trees. In many of the more ancient churches in England you will find trunks labelled Crusaders Chests. How many of these are actually Crusaders chests is debatable, but the practice in the 12th and later centuriew was to pick a good sized oak. Cut it down and square the ends and to a degree the sides then remove the side which would eventually become the top. The trunk was then hollowed out to leave an overall thickness of about 3 inches, the lid was affixed with interlocking iron staples of with something more inclined to resemble a hinge, and with an iron hasp which could be locked. Locks were known from Roman times.


There is a very good example of a crusaders chest made from a single piece of wood at the Church of St Mary Magdalen in Little Burstead near Billericay in Essex.


RTB


  Results from FactBites:
 
Trunk (luggage) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1432 words)
A trunk, also known as a travelling chest, is a large cuboid container for holding clothes and other personal belongings, typically about 1.5 metres wide, and 0.5 metres each deep and high, or about 25" to 40" wide, 14" to 28" high, and 14" to 24" deep.
Trunks are differentiated from chests by their more rugged construction due to their intended use of travelling, instead of the latter's pure storage.
Although trunks have been around for thousands of years in China and elsewhere, the most common styles seen and referred to today date from the late 18th Century to the early 20th, when they were supplanted in the market by the cheaper and lighter suitcase.
Trunk - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (186 words)
Trunk (botany), the main structural member of a tree.
Trunk (automobile), a compartment on a car used for storage in American English, called a boot in British English.
Trunking (auto) for details of the dangerous practice of carrying passengers in the trunk of a car.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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